First, I summarize excerpts from Heather Roger's paper "Gone Tomorrow Trash's Hidden Life" published in 2005. Next I will summarize the paper by Lars Eighner on Darster Diving, published in 1995. Our government needs to establish strict standardized laws to carefully regulate and supervise today's waste, and more importantly tomorrow's waste disposal. I think that this is necessary for big companies and companies to deduce consumption. Finally, what we want to say is that we need to disclose the importance and necessity of restricting consumption to protect the future.
We need to love our garbage. Before we overcome the problem of thinking that things are one-time, the problem is one-time, and life is composed of economic "goods" and "bad" at all levels, we consume It is requested to discard. In order to successfully overcome the "waste problem", we must overcome our belief that there is something like garbage. I have eaten a bowl or a fork, but I can drink water on a CD holder, use a pen to eat food, and use a credit card to spread cream cheese. What is clearly assigned?
Treating waste has a whole economy. The provincial government and people do not pay for garbage, but we do not have to consider in order to throw it away, throw it away, or leave it so that it no longer exists. What is the inconvenient collection of materials we want to deal with? Also, do you actually pay for someone to share? Organic materials are the largest component of our waste formally known as "municipal solid waste". According to the US Environmental Protection Agency, the US waste is about 27% paper, 28% of plants and food, 13% plastic, 9% metal, rubber / leather / fabric (cloth) 9%. % Wood and 5% glass. 3% is composed of "all kinds of waste not classifiable".